AP. May this be the fate of all our enemies
ז זְכֹר יְהוָה לִבְנֵי אֱדוֹם אֵת יוֹם יְרוּשָׁלִָם:
הָאֹמְרִים עָרוּ עָרוּ עַד הַיְסוֹד בָּהּ
Remember, O LORD, the day of Jerusalem
against the children of Edom who said:
'Raze it, raze it, even to its foundation!'
Psalm 137
B"H
Chodesh Tov to all,
"We have practically lost all our artistic patrimony," said Alberto
Silvestri, mayor of San Felice. "Churches and towers collapsed. The
theatre is still standing but has cracks."
I
haven't posted since before Pessach, and frankly I don't have the
energy to post these days. But this story bears telling; we Jews deserve
to know when Hashem does miracles for us. Here is one: the church's
evil powers shaken to the core; and in this case I don't mean just your run- of- the- mill catholic idol worship; I am talking about the darkest forces of the papacy, where incest, idolatry and murder converge; the forces of darkness of the church were concentrated in the castle that was destroyed on Yom Yerushalayim; ever heard of the CUP OF BORGIA? It originated there. Read below a new dialogue with Dov
Bear Bar Leib, who follows the Zohar's writings closely, and connects
the Zohar's statements with current events. He was discussing Dionysus
earlier and had written some very scholarly comments on the Zohar, so I
sent him the following, which I had read and noticed last night.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castello_Estense
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/47502376#.T7p1MlLO6So
http://news.yahoo.com/6-3-magnitude-earthquake-strikes-near-bologna-italy-022116451.html
This
place was destroyed on Yom Yerushalayim. All their patrimony - Dionysus
/ Bacchus - destroyed., All their churches - flattened.
And the name of the locale? Sant' Agostino - Saint Augustine - their big and famous Jesuit.
Oh, and by the way, their PIGS got destroyed too. So interesting,.
I
think this is very important. I was hesitating to mention it because
that place was good to the Jews in the past, and also had a link to
protestantism. However the link to the Catholic church is very strong,
and so is the link to Dionysus and wine.
Where do these articles mention Dionysus?
me: They mention BACCHUS - same thing, same god, only Roman.
Dov: Yes, I knew that sorry I was just scanning them.
me: Read about Bacchanales. This site was dedicated to Dionysus, and I guess celebrated appropriately.
me: Cabinet of the Bacchanalia
This
is a little passage-way that was at one time completely painted; the
right-hand wall still shows three scenes inspired by the myth of
Bacchus.
In 1999 under
the initiative of the provincial administration, it started "The Castle
for the City" project, that scheduled a massive restoration of the
castle. The itinerary of the restoration of the castle has gone through
important steps to remember: the exhibition "The Triumph of Bacchus"
inaugurated in 2002 by the President of the Italian Republic Carlo
Azeglio Ciampi and the art exposition "The Este in Ferrara" opened on 14
March 2004 by the President of the European Commission Romano Prodi. In
2006 the whole project of restoration of the Castle was concluded with
two significant events: the completion of the touristic tour designed by
Gae Aulenti and the restoration and opening of the Cabinets of Alfonso
d'Este.
[Comment : BECAUSE they restored this horror they deserved destruction, I would say. Why revive this dead monster? What does it say about these people? What does it say about the current pope?]
The tower was damaged in the 2012 Northern Italy earthquake.
After
the departure of the Este to Modena, the castle became the residence of
the Papal Legate who administered the Ferrarese territory as civil
governor (for a maximum term of four years).
me: Saletta dei Giochi
The
Saletta dei Giochi ("Small Chamber of Games") has a ceiling decorated,
in the centre, with the round dance of the Four Seasons, and around that
frescoes with scenes of the Games of Ancient Rome; on the long side a
Bacchanal; opposite that the Basket Fight, a sort of boxing in which the
competitors had around their hands bandages called ‘baskets’. On the
two short walls are represented Gladiator fights. At the bottom, scenes
of children's games rendered in the artistic style of Ancient Rome. From
the Saletta dei Giochi it's possible to climb right up to the
balustrade of the Lion's Tower, from which it is possible to enjoy a
good panoramic view of the city of Ferrara.
Saletta dei Veleni
The
Saletta dei Veleni ("Small Chamber of Poisons") seems to have been used
originally by the court pharmacists to produce medicine and, according
to some, also the poisons used against political enemies. The ceiling is
from the 20th century and represents Italy surrounded by symbols of
conquest from the fascist period.
Dov: Was the passage destroyed??
Cabinet of the Bacchanalia
me: Don't know. The whole thing was destroyed, maybe not completely but badly enough.
Among others.
me: Read various articles in the press about what that earthquake destroyed.
Dov: this is massive if that passage was destroyed or badly damaged.
me: The
interesting thing is, the same thing happened, guess when? During
Birkat Hachamah, Erev Pessach 3 years ago. I was in Mexico at the time, I
remember very clearly the event, and all their newspapers in Spanish
mentioned how all the churches - the papal estates - were destroyed.
Now this happened again during a SOLAR event.
The
massive thing is, San Augustine destroyed, churches destroyed, during
the solar eclipse. THAT is the massive stuff. Also associated with
Pessach - Shavuot.
The first one happened Erev Pessach.
The second happened Erev Rosh Chodesh Sivan - Shavuot.
I deduct that the third one - with the churches of ROME destroyed - will happen on or around Succot, which year I don't know..
Both times associated with a seminal event according to the Jewish calendar.
Birkat Hachamah happens only every 28 years, and that year was very special.
This particular eclipse happened every 20 years, also a very special year according to what you were saying.
I see a clear link between the two. Prayers of the Jews.
Dov: yet
this is a massive event related to the Geulah as brought down by the
Zohar. The 7 stars blocked out by the sun in year 72 were the Pleiades.
The Pleiades were the nursemaids to Dionysus
me: This Estense is a castle, not a
church. Churches did get damaged, but this is something else.
It was a whole entity, one cruel one too. House of horrors and of bacchanalia apparently.
Now
remember too that wine was frequently used to poison popes , etc. And
they had a chamber of poisons. Borgia was one of the main pope
poisoners. I wonder if he had any links in Ferrara.
Will check it out, all the sordid papal stories are linked to this kind of stuff.
me: With
other words this castle had a room where they prepared poisons. Were
those poisons mixed in with the wine used to kill various popes opposed
to various Vatican rulings?
me: Here is the link! I was right. This was the hall of poison horrors connected to the Borgias:
Lucrezia
Borgia (Italian pronunciation: [luˈkrɛttsja ˈbɔrdʒa]; 18 April 1480 –
24 June 1519) was the illegitimate daughter of Rodrigo Borgia, the
powerful Renaissance Valencian who later became Pope Alexander VI, and
Vannozza dei Cattanei. Her brothers included Cesare Borgia, Giovanni
Borgia, and Gioffre Borgia. It is often suggested that Cesare and
Lucrezia may have had an incestuous relationship.[1]
Lucrezia's
family later came to epitomize the ruthless Machiavellian politics and
sexual corruption alleged to be characteristic of the Renaissance
Papacy. Lucrezia was cast as a femme fatale, a role she has been
portrayed as in many artworks, novels, and films.
Very little is
known of Lucrezia, and the extent of her complicity in the political
machinations of her father and brothers is unclear. They certainly
arranged several marriages for her to important or powerful men in order
to advance their own political ambitions. Lucrezia was married to
Giovanni Sforza (Lord of Pesaro), Alfonso of Aragon (Duke of Bisceglie),
and Alfonso I d'Este (Duke of Ferrara). Tradition has it that Alfonso
of Aragon was an illegitimate son of the King of Naples and that her
brother Cesare may have had him murdered after his political value
waned.
me: One
horrible family. Lucrezia Borgia was married to the duke of Ferrara,
duke d'Este, whose castle contained the hall of poisons.
me: She
was the daughter of a pope. Look at this, the story is coming full
circle. Now you will understand why this earthquake had to happen, and
why this castle had to be destroyed:
Probably the core evil of the papacy rested there.
For information on THE CUP OF BORGIA, search this blog. The method of the Borgias is still being used to this day; killing political enemies with secret poison drinks.
(I bet you Shimon Peres was one of the first to send his condolences on the loss of this 'patrimony'.)
Several
rumours have persisted throughout the years, primarily speculating as
to the nature of the extravagant parties thrown by the Borgia family.
Many of these concern allegations of incest, poisoning, and murder on
her part; however, no historical basis for these rumours has ever been
brought forward, beyond allegations made by the rivals of the Borgias.
It is rumoured that Lucrezia was in possession of a hollow ring that she used frequently to poison drinks.[26][27]
An early 20th century painting by Frank Cadogan Cowper that hangs in
the London art gallery, Tate Britain, portrays Lucrezia taking the
place of her father, Pope Alexander VI, at an official Vatican meeting.
This apparently documents an actual event, although the precise moment
depicted (a Franciscan friar kissing Lucrezia's feet) was invented by
the artist.[28]
This is one piece of news you won't read in the media!